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the_morden_man

Pickering Nurseries Announcement

the_morden_man
9 years ago

Not sure if this has been posted here yet already, but this was new news to me.

It's a sad day for rose lovers everywhere. They have been in apparent decline for a few years now, but they were once the de facto standard for roses on multiflora understock.

Go to their website for the details:

http://www.pickeringnurseries.com/index.html

Here is a link that might be useful: Pickering Nurseries Homepage

Comments (38)

  • jerijen
    9 years ago

    More bad news. :-(

  • User
    9 years ago

    The own roots in 2016 sounds good.

  • nastarana
    9 years ago

    Hybridizer royalty rates have increased? I understand the hybridizers have to make a living and are not getting rich, except for Mr. Austin and Herr Kordes, but why now? Are they not pricing themselves out of their market?

    NAFTA, that we all know and love, strikes again with the cheap US grown roses putting a good nursery almost out of business.

    Can I legally drive to Canada, buy roses, and mail them to myself in the US?

  • anntn6b
    9 years ago

    One problem for Pickering was that they were charged for every bud of plants of a certain hybridizer, even if the bud didn't take or if the plant didn't sell. That made it almost impossible for them to make a profit when they were offering roses by that hybridizer that weren't sell-out popular.

    Any roses imported to the US have to have a phytosanitary certificate. That is more than just mailing them to yourself. I do know that a bunch of folks near Lexington KY would place an order to nurseries in Canada and then drive up and get them WITH a phytosanitary and stay with the plants as they crossed the border coming home.

  • seil zone 6b MI
    9 years ago

    The times, they are a changin'...

  • roseseek
    9 years ago

    I don't know all the royalties which supposedly increased, but the per bud charge originated with Mr. Austin. Traditionally, the way it worked was royalties were paid for every plant successfully raised and sold. If they died or weren't sold, nothing was paid. Mr. Austin changed all that, demanding his royalties for every bud supplied, period. It didn't make any difference whether they took or not, or if the entire crop died in the field. He got his. His royalty charges were higher than anyone else's and his licensing agreements were rather outrageous. At one time, if you wanted to carry his new roses, you were forbidden by the licensing agreement to sell any of his earlier roses he felt "obsolete". His definition of obsolete was any rose Hortico had introduced into the North American market before Austin had any patents on them. Since he couldn't patent them, he began trademarking their names so you could sell the rose, but you couldn't use the trade names for them without paying him for the privilege. Those were the Austin roses Vintage used to only sell by the breeder's codes, the 'AUS' names. They could sell Heritage as as Ausblush without owning any royalties, but once they mentioned Heritage, they were on the hook for payment and could be sued for it.

    One year, he began licensing each introducer to carry only a small group of the new roses, giving them 'exclusives' on them. If they wanted to also carry some of the ones the competitors had licensed, they had to make licensing agreements between them and pay extra royalties to the Austin machine for their agreements. Austin Roses refused to allow introducers to pick and choose the ones they wanted to promote. You bought his selection for you and worked out cross licensing agreements with the increased royalties with your competitors or you didn't sell the new roses. Those were a few of the reasons for the complaints that Austin treated the US as his personal ATM. They were also the reasons Arena Roses chose not to sell the new Austin roses, but continued selling a few of the tried and true for the warmer areas of the country. He also began promoting the Poulsen roses instead. The marketing was great for their profits, but painful and counter productive for introducers and customers. Kim

  • ratdogheads z5b NH
    9 years ago

    Noooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • User
    9 years ago

    yeah, the Austins are our Knockouts - am truly sick of those bloated and frilly monsters....but marketing is a blunt weapon of mass destruction where innovation and creativity is concerned.

  • Dar Sunset Zone 18
    9 years ago

    Pickering was great. I am sad to see them go. They were there to provide me with Rose de Rescht and I will treasure this plant as a souvenir from Pickering.

    Thanks for the info Kim. So I guess that explains why DA roses in the green pot and all cost $44 for a 5 gal pot at a local nursery.

    I don't find it outrageous DA is charging for budwood to use for propagation (I assume these budwood are provided by DA). Isn't this model long used in other types of non-patented plants such as citrus? But if DA is charging per bud taken from mother plants the propagator already own, I think that is outrageous.

    I thought it was legal to propagate pantented plants (not just roses) as long as you don't intend to sell it. After all, mother nature does come into play in every garden and you may "accidently" wind up with multiples of a patented plant through division or suckers or stolons, etc. And only if you do plan on selling patented material, isn't that were the royalty fee should come into play?

  • Kippy
    9 years ago

    Musa

    Guessing it is the same with roses, but I went to a pruning demo that had a rep from a big fruit tree company doing the talk. Some one asked if they could have the part removed for their home orchard use and boy did we get a quick lesson in this is protected bud wood and you can buy the plant but anything pruned is protected property of them

  • roseseek
    9 years ago

    Musaboro, Austins cost $44 a piece because they CAN. Part is because of the royalty cost, part is because the market will bear it. The green pots are the plants purchased FROM Austin, aren't they? I've not shopped the green pots as I don't keep up with his introductions. You can easily see from his nursery site how much he feels his offerings are worth simply from the prices. His roses don't require any more effort to produce than anyone else's budded or own root plant do. Why else should they cost so much more? You're paying for the brand, period. Like buying designer jeans instead of Wranglers.

    Yes, many plants reproduce themselves and as long as you're not selling the divisions, there are no royalties involved. You aren't "propagating" them as it is the nature of the plant to colonize. When you take a hand in reproducing the plant through rooting, budding/grafting, layering, etc., you are violating the patent protection. A budded rose plant isn't normally going to reproduce itself asexually, producing separate plants. Perhaps if planted so the scion is under soil so it roots itself, it may result in an increase in the number of plants from that original bud. Separating them and offering them to other people would, I think, be a violation, but just growing the plant and not producing copies of it wouldn't. That's a gray area you and I are going to probably feel much different about than the Austin Machine.

    As far as I know, the per bud charge pertains to all buds, whether they provide them or they come from your stock plants. At least that is the way it was when I had access to the process. It's difficult to police and requires a great deal more accounting than the traditional historic US method of simply charging royaties on the number of plants sold. That is also going to raise costs quite a bit, plus it's a pain in the neck. It's easy to see why Pickering made the decision not to offer many patented roses last year. I don't blame them. Kim

  • lynnette
    9 years ago

    Hortico has picked up some of the Pickering roses.

  • ingrid_vc so. CA zone 9
    9 years ago

    "bloated and frilly monsters"? campanula, my sweet old Austin rose Potter and Moore is hanging its leaves in dismay. I don't have any of the latest productions and can't speak for them, but Kim's description of what seems to be inordinate greed is enough to make me stay away from the Austine money machine. A decent profit, yes; making others pay through the nose in order to be able to choose the Austins they want to sell seems sneaky and underhanded.

    Ingrid

  • User
    9 years ago

    I feel as if lost a close friend.

    Kim you gave me a very strong incentive to rip off my one and only Austin.

  • ColoradoRosarianGuy
    9 years ago

    Sad news yet again.... Sad to hear of the passing of the main man there too. The rose gardens of Heaven will be well cared for though.

  • newroses
    9 years ago

    I must comment to nastarana - I don't think you know much about the commercial rose business or royalties. It takes about 10-12 years of research before a variety is released into commerce and the guess is that only one or 2 out of 100,000 seedlings from a hybridization program ever make it to the market. It is extremely expensive to have a commercial rose breeding program which is why there are so few of them in the world. I don't think anyone is getting rich from breeding roses and most of the companies that breed roses make most of their money from production of roses bushes. Austin does have a very high royalty but in their defense they also spend a lot of the money they bring in on a lot of very nice advertising which is very expensive.

    Pickering was at a disadvantage in that it is much cheaper to grow rose bushes in California and Arizona than in Canadian climates. Growing on multi flora should have been a good market advantage as none in these other growing areas uses this root stock. Joel also made the mistake of bringing his root stock from Europe - there is a 2 year quarantine before this material can enter the USA so he was unable to send the roses he budded into the USA as planned which hurt his business.

    Roses travel both ways and these Canadian companies have shipped many roses into the USA probably more than they have sold in Canada. So remember that NAFTA works from both sides. I am always surprised that Canadians don't support the Canadian companies more by buying the home grown roses - something like the eat local campaign. Consumers can really change markets if they want to...

    As far as going to Canada and buying roses and then bringing them back you face the same issue as Pickering - you will need to have a phyto-sanitary permit and yes they cost money. Roses traveling to Canada from the USA have the same requirement and it is expensive to get the permits to send just a few roses.

    I wish Joel much success in the future.

  • nastarana
    9 years ago

    LongAgo Roses sells some of the earlier English roses under their AUSnames. I think the proprietor doesn't bother with the newer varieties. It is not readily apparent, from what I can tell, that the newer, patented varieties are any significant improvement over the best of the early cultivars. Gardeners who like these roses soon learn to recognize the AUSnames. Maybe Pickering would be well advised to let someone else have the newer varieties.

  • Kippy
    9 years ago

    Kim

    Need any green pots? I have a bunch of them being used as a mini wall and ironically holding red pelagroniums that get no water.....

  • roseseek
    9 years ago

    Hi Kippy, "Green pots"? You mean Monrovia pots or something else? If they're two gallons, sure, please! If they're ones, I'm good with as many ones as I can handle, thank you. Or, are they something else? Thanks. Kim

  • Kippy
    9 years ago

    Green DA pots complete with a foo foo badge. :)

    Still working on collecting a bunch of 2gs for ya though

  • roseseek
    9 years ago

    Thank you. So, they're twos or fives? I should be able to use them, thank you! Kim

  • Kippy
    9 years ago

    How many 5g's can you use? those are easy

  • roseseek
    9 years ago

    Perhaps a dozen, please? Now, twos, I can use all I can get. That's the size I push seedlings into before I make the final cuts. Thank you! Kim

  • nastarana
    9 years ago

    Campanula, I might be burned in effigy for saying so, but how you feel about the "bloated and frilly monsters", is how I feel about the oeuvre of Dr. Griffith Buck. Rank heresy for an American gardener, but I think what Dr. Buck was good at was naming roses. Every cultivar has an evocative name which sounds like it comes right out of mid20thC advertising. I dreamed I danced in my Maidenform under an April Moon. They were playing Malaguena when we met over a glass of Seagrams' Gin.

    There are now, and have been, breeders working hard to develop hardy roses in North America, such as Mr. Radler, Mr. Horvath, Mr. Jerabec and others. I am no fan of KO. but Radler has gone on to introduce a line of repeat blooming, disease resistant, hardy climbers which look very interesting indeed. Then there is Mr. Bugnet, introducer of Therese, Marie and Louis Bugnets. I know of no Buck rose which enjoys the universal acclaim or approaches the generally recognized excellence of Therese Bugnet.

  • roseseek
    9 years ago

    That's funny, Nastrana! I enjoyed your "Robin Williams moment"! Dr. Buck's primary "problem" was, he never had any great distribution. Iowa State paid him, but never supported his roses. Roses of Yesterday and Today introduced the majority of them, but you could never call them a "major player" in the industry. He needed a Monrovia, J&P, Armstrong, CP even Week's at their mightiest. Unfortunately, he never enjoyed it during his lifetime. Kim

  • henry_kuska
    9 years ago

    nastarana, perhaps your opinion of Dr. Buck's roses was distorted if your samples were infected with one or more viruses. My original copy of Carefree Beauty was fabulous. Later I purchased another which was nowhere close to the original.

  • User
    9 years ago

    Newroses, I was sort of surprised by your comment. Why do you think Canadians don't support their local business?

  • summersrhythm_z6a
    8 years ago

    Pickering will be back in 2016! :-)

    http://www.pickeringnurseries.com/

  • rosecanadian
    8 years ago

    That's awesome!!!! Yay!!

    Carol

  • stillanntn6b
    8 years ago

    I can't be as optimistic as summersrhythm and rosecanadian. What made Pickering so important to me was the roses they sold were grafted on multiflora rootstock and were two years in the field. Rooted cuttings (as per that link) won't be the same thing at all, and I don't see their being able to ship barerooted cuttings to the USA without soil. And the cuttings can't have soil because the USDA requires that they be able to inspect the roots thoroughly.


  • fig_insanity Z7b E TN
    8 years ago

    I have to agree with Ann. If Pickering does re-open, but only ships rooted cuttings, I can't see them being able to ship to the USA. IF the cuttings are grown out for *two or more years* before they ship, they would be of a size to survive. Otherwise, a one-year cutting that gets bare-rooted will never survive the trip.

    John

  • summersrhythm_z6a
    8 years ago

    I think you guys are right about rooted cuttings. I'd have to drive 3 hrs (one way) to pick up the roses. I'd need to call first to order the roses, then they could hire an inspector for the certificate (crossing the border) before my visit. Hope I can see the list soon.

  • andyvancleve
    8 years ago

    What pickering should do is open a branch in the US and supply them wholesale.

  • bellarosa
    8 years ago

    I agree with Ann and Andy!

  • SylviaWW 9a Hot dry SoCal
    8 years ago

    Another one bites the dust ... arrggh!

  • Rosefolly
    7 years ago

    There is a note on the Pickering website that they have closed permanently. Probably not a big surprise, but disappointing news nonetheless.


    I don't know if this has been posted here yet, but if so, I have not seen it.

  • yugoslava
    5 years ago

    Bought many roses from Pickering nursery over the years. Used to salivate reading their catalogue. Before they moved to Cobourg I would go to Pickering to pick up my plants and occasionally spend some time walking through the fields behind their office. That was before son took over the business. It broke my heart when they closed. However, reading a comments above on difficulties they were having I understand better why they closed. At the same time there are other nurseries that have closed in Canada in the last 15 years. Some of them were very good and I still miss them. I admired Austin roses and had absolutely no idea David Austin was a money driven businessman. It explains why his plants are so expensive.